Desmond Morris
Desmond Morris | |
---|---|
Desmond Morris (1969) | |
Born |
Desmond John Morris 24 January 1928 Purton, Wiltshire, England |
Residence | Oxford, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Zoologist and ethologist |
Known for | The Naked Ape (1967) |
Desmond John Morris (born 24 January 1928) is an English zoologist, ethologist and surrealist painter, as well as a popular author in human sociobiology.
Early life
Born on 24 January 1928 in Purton, Wiltshire, England, Desmond Morris is the son of Marjorie (née Hunt) and the children's fiction author Harry Morris. In 1933, the Morrises moved to the nearby town of Swindon, which remained his primary home until 1951. During this time in Swindon, Morris began to develop a strong interest in both natural history and writing. In 1941, Morris attended Dauntsey's School, a co-educational boarding school for 11- to 18-year-olds on the northern edge of Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire. It was during this time away at school that Morris's passion for both zoology and the modern visual arts began to intensify and come to the surface.[1]
In 1946, Morris was conscripted into the British Army for two years of national service. During this time, he became a lecturer in fine arts at the Chiseldon Army College, and also began to take painting seriously. In 1948, he was demobilised from the army, and that same year held his first one-man show of his own paintings at the Swindon Arts Centre. Pursuing his interests immediately, that autumn he enrolled as an undergraduate in the Zoology Department of the University of Birmingham. Morris graduated with a First Class Honours Degree in zoology. He moved on in 1951 to the Zoology Department and Magdalen College at Oxford University to begin his research into animal behaviour for his doctorate degree, mainly basing his studies on reproductive communication systems.[1] In 1954, he earned a Doctor of Philosophy for his research and works leading to his doctoral thesis regarding reproductive behaviour of the ten-spined stickleback.
Sociobiology
After receiving his doctoral degree from Oxford University, Morris continued at the university, conducting research on the reproductive behaviour of birds. After some time elapsed, including Morris's move to London in 1956, he thence began a research project into the picture-making abilities of apes.[1] The following year of 1957 he organised an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, all of paintings and drawings composed by chimpanzees. Later, in 1958 he co-organised an exhibition which compared pictures made by the likes of infants, human adults, and apes. The event was called The Lost Image and was held at the Royal Festival Hall in London. After assuming the position of Curator in 1959, Morris' upcoming years begin to fill with strings and strings of books to be released on the topics of animal behaviour, art, many centring on the topic of human behaviour, as well as comparisons to primates, viewing humanity as revolutionised from the hunter-gatherer to the city dweller.[1] Morris also published books covering infant behaviour watching, as well as man watching, and watchings of various types of animals such as cats and dogs.[2]
Morris' works have been published worldwide. His first book that concerned human behaviour was The Naked Ape: A Zoologist's Study of the Human Animal,[3] published in 1967. The book gained much popularity. Following its success, in 1968 Morris moved to the Mediterranean island of Malta in order to focus on preparing a sequel as well as freely painting and other activities. Shortly thereafter, with books still continuously being published, in 1971 he opened his research headquarters in Malta, in order to conduct research towards producing an encyclopedia of all human actions, more specifically, to classify all human action-patterns. However, in 1973 Morris left Malta to work for the Nobel Prize winner Niko Tinbergen in his research group studying animal behaviour, with the Department of Zoology at Oxford University.[4]
In 1982 Morris began to study archaeological research for a new, slightly different book, The Art of Ancient Cyprus. The following year Morris published Book of Ages, a year-by-year account of human life from birth to death. Morris finished writing The Art of Ancient Cyprus the next year, 1984, and published it in 1985. His next research project, conducted in 1988, focused on the colors used in decorating human homes.[1] The findings and data were brought together that same year within a report called Nestbuilders. Throughout his entire career Desmond Morris has produced a steady stream of books on the observations of life, humans, animals and even paintings as well as children's books on the matters. Despite all of his other interests, the majority of his books took place under the category of sociobiology.[2]
Art
In 1948, Morris had his first one-man showing of his paintings, at Swindon Art Centre. Two years later, he emerged into the surrealist art scene at the London Gallery. For the first time at an event held by the Belgian surrealist Edouard Mesens. The event was held with Joan Miró. The following year (1951), Morris travelled to Belgium to exhibit his paintings at an international art festival. His next art showing was not until 1957 when he organised a chimpanzee paintings and drawings exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (a result of his research study into the drawing abilities of apes). In the spring of 1967, upon release of Morris's first human behavioural book, he resigned from his post of Curator held at the London Zoo, and thence became executive director of the London Institute of Contemporary Arts for only a year, until 1968 with the release of The Naked Ape, thus sending Morris on an absence from the arts world of over twenty years, while his sociobiology career took the front seat.[1]
During 1973–81, Morris was a Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford.[5] In 1974, shortly after returning from his time painting, studying and writing in Malta, Morris held his first exhibition of his surrealist paintings since before the takeoff of his career in other areas. The showing was held at the Stooshnoff Fine Art Gallery in London. Two years Morris held four more exhibitions of paintings, including an exhibition holding 61 works of his from over thirty years – held at the Public Art Gallery in his former home of Swindon. In 1987, Morris combined his two passions of writing and art, to create and publish his first book about his surrealist paintings called The Secret Surrealist, with introduction by Phillip Oakes.[1] His first showing of paintings after the book's release was held the following year in New York at the Shippee Gallery. Morris continues his showings to this day, with his works being documented and recognised officially by his biographer Silvano Levy in Desmond Morris: 50 Years of Surrealism in 1997. Morris has since travelled showing his art exhibits around the world, from his home in Britain branching throughout Europe. In 2005 a solo exhibit, Ape Artists of the 1950s, of paintings by apes from his earlier studies in the 1950s, was held at the Mayor Gallery in London.
Swindon Art Centre | Swindon | 1948 |
London Gallery | London | 1950 |
Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | 1952 |
Stooshnoff Fine Art | London | 1974 |
Quadrangle Gallery | Oxford | 1976 |
Wolfson College | Oxford | 1976 |
Lasson Gallery | London | 1976 |
Public Art Gallery | Swindon | 1977 |
Galerie d'Eendt | Amsterdam | 1978 |
Mayor Gallery | London | 1987 |
Shippee Gallery | New York | 1988 |
Keats Gallery | Knokke-le-Zoute | 1988 |
Mayor Gallery | London | 1989 |
Mayor Gallery | London | 1991 |
Galerie Michele Heyraud | Paris | 1991 |
Public Art Galley | Swindon | 1993 |
Mayor Gallery | London | 1994 |
Public art galleries | Stoke and Nottingham | 1996 |
Mayor Gallery | London | 1997 |
Charleston Gallery | Sussex | 1997 |
Public Art Gallery | Buxton | 1997 |
Clayton Gallery | Newcastle | 1998 |
Keitelman Gallery | Brussels | 1998 |
Rossaert Gallery | Antwerp | 1998 |
Witteveen Gallery | Amsterdam | 1999 |
Television and film
In 1950, Desmond Morris made his debut in film and television,[1] writing and directing two surrealist films entitled Time Flower and The Butterfly and the Pin. In 1956 he moved to London in order to assume the position at the Zoological Society of London as Head of the Granada TV and Film Unit. Morris's job thus included creating programmes for both film and television on the topic of animal behaviour and other various zoology-orientated topics. His job remained as a host for Granada TV's weekly Zoo Time programme for the following three years up until 1959. During his time in this position, a total of eight years, Morris scripted and hosted a total of 500 Zoo Time programmes, along with 100 episodes of the show Life in the Animal World for BBC2.[1] During this time he also dabbled in radio for the BBC on topics of natural history. However, he left the Film & TV unit at the London Zoo in order to become the Zoological Society's Curator of Mammals (1959).[1]
After a long break from the world of television, Morris re-entered the game in 1979, undertaking a new television series for Thames TV. The series was called The Human Race, focusing on human behaviour. The show's filming ran on schedule and was presented on television in 1982. Later the series was shown in many other countries as well. That same year, Morris travelled to Japan for another television expedition to make a production titled Man Watching in Japan, which was shown on Japan Television in that autumn of 1982. In 1986 Morris started working on a new TV series (co-presented by British TV Broadcaster Sarah Kennedy) which was called The Animals Road Show. The show totalled 40 programmes over the next three years, as well as a book published on the series within that time frame.[1] After the show's second year airing, Morris began filming another TV series that was called The Animal Contract. The show aired for Australian television, wrapping up in 1989. Although The Animal Road Show ended in 1989 also, Morris and Kennedy reunited in 1992 to show a second series of exactly fourteen half-hour episodes. This was followed by a third series the following year in 1993, with thirteen half-hour programmes. This was followed by a fourth series in 1994, and finally a fifth in 1995, all with Sarah Kennedy. In 1994, Morris also wrote then presented a series of six one-hour TV episodes for BBC1, called The Human Animal. This series went on to win the Cable Ace Award in Los Angeles for best documentary series in 1995. The following year Morris began to work on The Human Sexes, a new TV sequel to The Human Animal, which was completed in 1997.
Filmography
- Zootime (Weekly, 1956–67)
- Life (1965–67)
- The Human Race (1982)
- The Animals Roadshow (1987–89)
- The Animal Contract (1989)
- Animal Country (1991–96)
- The Human Animal (1994)
- The Human Sexes (1997)
Lectures
In 1964 he was invited to deliver the Royal Institution Christmas Lecture on Animal Behaviour.
Bibliography
- The Biology of Art (1963) – a look at the paintings of primates and their relation to human art
- The Big Cats (1965) – part of The Bodley Head Natural Science Picture Books, looking at the habits of the five Big Cats, the lion, tiger, leopard, jaguar, snow leopard, and the cheetah.[6]
- The Mammals: A Guide to the Living Species (1965) – a comprehensive and compelling listing of all mammal genera, all non-rodent non-bat species, and additional information on select species.
- The Naked Ape (1967) – an unabashed look at the human species. The book is notable for its focus on humanity's animalistic qualities and our similarity with other apes. Reprinted many times and in many languages, it continues to be a best-seller.
- The Human Zoo (1969) – a continuation of the previous book, analysing human behaviour in big modern societies and their resemblance to animal behaviour in captivity.
- Intimate Behaviour (1971) – In "Intimate Behaviour" Morris studies the human side of intimate behaviour from clapping to cutting hair, from the embrace to copulation. Morris examines how natural selection shaped human physical contact in and how intimate behaviours are expressed and/or repressed in modern culture. Morris explains the origins of complex and mundane human signaling and body contact relating much of it to the pre-natal condition in the womb and the experience of the protection and attention that children receive when young and helpless. Morris infers that most intimate contact is a variation or repetition of such comforting and secure contact which is expressed in thinly disguised forms from pats on the back to massage "therapy". Morris describes an increasingly rigid modern society empty of typical physical interaction in public and how people compensate by enacting intimate behaviour in other forms in private or through deviant behaviour in public.
- Manwatching: A Field Guide to Human Behaviour (1978)
- Gestures: Their Origin and Distribution (1979)
- Animal Days (1979) – Autobiographical
- The Soccer Tribe (1981)
- Pocket Guide to Manwatching (1982)
- Inrock (1983)
- Bodywatching – A Field Guide to the Human Species (1985) – Hundreds of photos analyzing the human body from hair down to the feet.
- Catwatching: & Cat Lore (1986) – a study of one of the most popular of household pets across the centuries.
- Dogwatching (1986) – an in-depth study of "man's best friend".
- Horsewatching (1989) – subtitled "Why does a horse whinny and everything else you ever wanted to know"
- Animalwatching (1990)
- Babywatching (1991)
- Bodytalk (1994)
- The Human Animal (1994) – book and BBC documentary TV series
- The Human Sexes (1997) – Discovery/BBC documentary TV series
- Cat World: A Feline Encyclopedia (1997)
- The Naked Eye (2001)
- Dogs: The Ultimate Dictionary of over 1,000 Dog Breeds (2001)
- Peoplewatching: The Desmond Morris Guide to Body Language (2002)
- The Naked Woman: A Study of the Female Body (2004)
- Linguaggio muto (Dumb language) (2004)
- The Nature of Happiness (2004)
- Watching (2006)
- The Naked Man: A Study of the Male Body (2008)
- Baby: A Portrait of the First Two Years of Life (2008)
- Planet Ape (2009)
- Owl (2009) – Part of the Reaktion Books Animal series, Desmond Morris covers the natural history, conservation and place in human culture, history, art and pop culture, of the owl.
- Monkey (2013) – Part of the Reaktion Books Animal series, Desmond Morris covers the natural history, conservation and place in human culture, history, art and pop culture, of the monkey.
- Leopard (2014) – Part of the Reaktion Books Animal series, Desmond Morris covers the natural history, conservation and place in human culture, history, art and pop culture, of the leopard.
- Bison (2015) – Part of the Reaktion Books Animal series, Desmond Morris covers the natural history, conservation and place in human culture, history, art and pop culture, of the bison.
Major events
- In 1951 upon moving his studies to Oxford University, Desmond Morris studied under Dr Nikolaas Tinbergen, a Dutch ethologist and ornithologist, who in 1973 shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with two other scientists for their discoveries.
- Holds one man art show at the world’s first university museum (Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology) in 1952, in Oxford.
- In 1952 the journal Behavior, published Morris’s first scientific paper on animal behavior. He produced 47 more over the next fifteen years.[1][7]
- Awarded Doctor of Philosophy (D.Phil) in 1954 by Oxford University, his thesis on the "Reproductive Behaviour of the Ten-spined Stickleback".
- First scientific book published in 1958: The Reproductive Behaviour of the Ten-spined Stickleback as well as a children’s book titled The Story of Congo.
- In 1981, Desmond became a founding member of the World Cultural Council.[8]
- In 1983, Desmond published his first fiction novel, called Inrock (science fiction, fantasy), reflective of the surrealist world he created within his paintings. Said to be primarily aimed towards children, but not entirely.
- In 1992 Desmond held his first one-man showing of his paintings in Paris.
- In 1996 an exhibition titled “Desmond Morris 50 Years of Surrealism” was held at both Stoke Gallery, and then second Nottingham Public Gallery; followed by a solo exhibit at Mayor Gallery in 1997 to coincide with Desmond Morris's official biographer Silvano Levy’s book entitled Desmond Morris: 50 Years of Surrealism.
- In 1998 Desmond Morris is awarded the honour of becoming a Doctor of Science by the University of Reading in Reading, Berkshire.
Personal life
When Morris was 14, his father was killed whilst serving in the armed forces. In a 2008 interview Morris said, "it was the beginning of a life-long hatred of the establishment. The church, the government and the military were all on my hate list and have remained there ever since."[9] As said in another interview, Morris's reasoning behind drifting towards the surrealist subculture is rather profound. In a time living as a child in the Second World War and then losing his father to the repercussions of that violence, an inner urge for rebellion against authority struck Morris.
Surrealism started in the 1920s as a rebellion against the horrendous natures of the Great War. These ideas fitted Morris’s mindset, enabling him to create his own world for himself within his paintings. Painting, he proclaimed, was his own personal pleasure, not business. So his rebellion resulted in other more positive outcomes, not just within his paintings, but through his desire to share knowledge in over 79 publications. Not wanting to cause grief for anyone in other aspects (due to his prior grief), he decided to aim his energies in these more positive directions such as writing evolutionarily beneficial works. And so he did, as seen through his life accomplishments, or entire lists of works. Desmond Morris's grandfather William Morris, a very enthusiastic Victorian naturalist, is noted to have played a great influence on Desmond Morris during his time living in Swindon. Interesting to note, William Morris founded the Swindon local newspaper.[1]
In July 1952, Morris married Ramona Baulch, a history graduate from Oxford. The two conceived their only son Jason in Malta. This occurred in 1968 following the success of The Naked Ape.[1] In 1978, Morris was elected Vice-Chairman of Oxford United F.C..
Morris reflected in an interview[10] with the following quote:
I also carried my message – about how fascinating animal behaviour and human behaviour can be – to an even wider audience by making television programmes, and presented a total of about 700 programmes over a period of half a century. I have now stopped that work and I am devoting my final years to the three things I enjoy most; writing books, painting pictures and travelling the world. I have so far managed to visit 95 countries and I have a schoolboy ambition to make that 100 countries before I die.
Morris lives in the same house in North Oxford as the 19th-century lexicographer James Murray who worked on the Oxford English Dictionary.[11] He exhibits at the Taurus Gallery in North Parade, Oxford, close to his home.[12]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Williams, D. "Desmond Morris Biography". Desmond-morris.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- 1 2 Williams, D. "Desmond Morris – Bibliography". Desmond-morris.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ Morris, D. (1967). The Naked Ape: A Zoologist's Study of the Human Animal (1st American ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
- ↑ Harré, R. (2006). "Chapter 5: The Biopsychologists". Key Thinkers in Psychology, pp. 125-132. London: Sage.
- ↑ "Desmond Morris". Social Issues Research Centre. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ↑ "The Big Cats ... Illustrated by Barry Driscoll.". explore.bl.uk. The British Library Board. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
- ↑ Williams, D. "Desmond Morris – Research". Desmond-morris.com. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ "About Us". World Cultural Council. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
- ↑ Douglas, Alice (1 November 2008). "My family values: Desmond Morris interview". The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
- ↑ "The Dan Schneider Interview 8: Desmond Morris". Cosmoetica. 16 February 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ↑ Moss, Stephen (18 December 2007). "We'd be better off if women ran everything". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ↑ "Taurus Gallery". Retrieved 1 December 2016.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Desmond Morris |
- Official website including a complete biography
- Works by or about Desmond Morris in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Desmond Morris at the Internet Movie Database
- Dinjet il-Qattus/Catlore by Desmond Morris, translated into Maltese by Toni Aquilina, D es Litt.